Issue 47, 2018, Issue in Progress

Development and characterisation of self-assembled graphene hydrogel-based anodes for bioelectrochemical systems

Abstract

In this work, we report a simple and scalable method to produce high efficiency 3D graphene-based electrodes (GH) for bioelectrochemical systems. GH were obtained by self-assembly of graphene oxide, through slow reduction with ascorbic acid over conductive mesh-works (carbon cloth and stainless-steel). The GH structure and composition were characterised by electron microscopy (SEM) and spectroscopy (FTIR and Raman), whereas the electrodes' performance was tested by chronoamperometry and cyclic voltammetry in a microbial electrolysis cell (MEC) inoculated with a pure culture of G. sulfurreducens. The hydrogel had a broad pore size distribution (>1 μm), which allowed bacterial colonisation within the framework. The macro-porous structure and chemical properties of the hydrogel rendered a higher bacterial loading capacity and substrate oxidation rate than other carbonaceous materials, including different reported graphene electrodes, which significantly increased MEC performance.

Graphical abstract: Development and characterisation of self-assembled graphene hydrogel-based anodes for bioelectrochemical systems

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 May 2018
Accepted
12 Jul 2018
First published
26 Jul 2018
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2018,8, 26755-26763

Development and characterisation of self-assembled graphene hydrogel-based anodes for bioelectrochemical systems

M. I. Lescano, A. Gasnier, M. L. Pedano, M. P. Sica, D. M. Pasquevich and M. B. Prados, RSC Adv., 2018, 8, 26755 DOI: 10.1039/C8RA03846E

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